Quote:
Originally Posted by mannys9130
Definitely. Hydrocarbon refrigerant's been beat to death already so I won't even attempt to touch that one... I'm glad to hear your Mk. 1 hand can't tell the difference between the two cars. My points still stand. Once you have to fuss with an R4, rip it out and put what's much better in its place. In Tucson, we see extreme temps that reach 115* F and subpar AC systems make themselves evident very clearly.
|
I agree that the R4 is an inferior compressor... but it's been in use for decades, and the problems with it in this car are the car's design limitiations, NOT the compressors...
the biggest problems are the HUGE evaporator coil, and the massive interior and glass in the vehicle, and the minuscule condenser area in the car.
changing to a sanden will get you longer life out of the compressor... but if you want to use the R4, and you already have it... be SURE you address all the problems with the vehicles system.
start with a PERFECTLY CLEAN condenser... clean it inside and out. all fins need to be meticulously cleaned and straightened... or replace the thing with a new coil. flush the hoses, and clean the evaporator.
a filter in the line feeding the condenser would do very little, as filters are designed for liquid flow to clean... and there is no liquid flow before the condenser. the screen might catch some debris when the compressor grenades, but not worth the leak potential in my opinion.
now, protecting the TXV with a filter after the condenser is a great upgrade... no idea why the receiver doesn't incorporate a filter in it...
123/126 ac systems simply aren't gonna cool well stock without upgrades if the vehicle operates above 92F ambient... sanden or R4...
CERTAINLY not with 134 in them...